LEAST THINGS
Poems by Jane Yolen
Photographs by Jason Stemple
Boyds Mills 2003
ISBN# 1-59078-098-1 Boyds Mills hardcover
LEAST THINGS began when I read the quote, "Nature excels
in her least things." I told my photographer son Jason and he began taking
photos of nature's smallest things--jingle shells, tiny crabs, butterflies,
bees, hummingbirds, etc. Slowly he gathered his photographs but I had an enormous
amount of trouble writing the poems. The first two I tried were for the shells
and the crab, and they were dreadful--and twice as long as the objects he had
photographed! And then one day I sat up in bed and said, "Of course, haiku!"
Why it took me so long to realize that haiku were the perfect form for the book,
I don't know. But once I had that figured out, I could sit down and finally
really focus on the book.
Available in hardcover.
What reviewers have said: "A solid addition to the poetry of science, and the science in poetry, for younger fans of both." -- Kirkus
"The subject matter, the eye-catching photographs, and the brevity of the selections will appeal to younger children. Older children, especially those who are studying haiku, will enjoy the wordplay and imagery... A first purchase with broad appeal." -- School Library Journal
"The author's warm, cozy words create a sense of personal acquaintance with each creature, making this collection an essential for every teacher's personal library." -- Childhood Education
Tiny creatures such as tree frogs and grasshoppers come
to light through the most economical of forms-haiku-as in this ode to the hummingbird:
"Do hummingbirds dream/ Of soaring on eagle wings?/ Just for a moment."
A few sentences of factual information follow each poem, and a full-bleed spread
highlights a crisply realistic photo in this handsomely designed volume.-PW
"Yolen collaborated with her son on this book inspired by a quote from Pliny: "Nature excels in the least things." Fourteen haikus celebrate small insects and animals and are accompanied by large color photographs and nonfiction paragraphs. Have students take digital photos of animals, create their own haikus, and write nonfiction about them." --BookLinks
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